New Construction
The Juniper and The Reserve at Juniper will bring 360 units and 167 boutique apartment homes, respectively, to the Midtown market.
The development, to be known as Bridlefield, will offer homes in three collections priced from the mid-$800,000s.
The ambitious project will deliver up to 10 million square feet of manufacturing, data center and logistics properties, plus 2,800 residences, over a 10- to 12-year buildout period.
The developments, Wildwood Place and Wilkins Walk, will bring 65 and 76 townhomes to market, respectively.
Homes at Hillshire range from the mid-$700,000s to the $900,000s.
What exactly goes into homebuilding costs, and how do those costs translate to profits for builders — and home prices for buyers?
Westlyn, a 29-home community coming to Winder, follows the launch of Cotton Creek, a 22-home development in Good Hope.
The $560 million development will replace the former State Farm Insurance office campus.
The development, Sugarloaf Crest, will bring 67 stacked townhomes to market across the street from the builder’s other build-to-rent community, Sugarloaf Landing.
The new neighborhood, Cotton Creek, will bring 22 single-family homes to the area.
The median-sales price slid from $425,600 in October to $402,600 last month.
Stanley Martin Homes is building a mix of two- and three-story homes on a 17.1-acre parcel, known as Sugar Creek.
The first 40 of the community’s 90 homes are now available for purchase.
Union Green was developed by Charleston, South Carolina-based Woodfield Development.
The Cottages at Dawsonville will offer 195 single-story homes.
The investor, Advantage Capital, used more than $53 million in state low-income housing tax credits to finance the communities.
